St Mary's Assisted Reproductive Technology and Cardiometabolic Health: Modifiable Targets for Multimorbidity Prevention (START-HEALThY)

NCT ID: NCT07173569

Last Updated: 2025-09-15

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

Total Enrollment

120 participants

Study Classification

OBSERVATIONAL

Study Start Date

2025-11-01

Study Completion Date

2028-10-31

Brief Summary

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The main causes of death in women are conditions affecting the heart and blood vessels (cardiovascular disease, CVD). Women who have difficulties getting pregnant (infertility) may be at increased risk, but the reasons for this are not clear. Infertility itself may be linked with poorer heart and blood vessel health, or fertility treatments such as in vitro fertilisation (IVF) could increase the risk.

The study aims to understand the practicalities of obtaining detailed profiling of women's pre- and post- pregnancy heart, blood vessel and metabolic health. Two groups of women in Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, will be recruited over 2 years: 1) women planning a pregnancy, either spontaneously or with IVF treatment after infertility, 2) women who previously took part in a pregnancy health study after IVF or non-IVF conception.

Participants will attend a single research appointment where they will undergo a cardiometabolic health assessment. They will have their BMI calculated, body composition measured, a measurement of how well their blood vessels work using a blood pressure cuff around the arm and/or finger and blood sampling performed. A blood pressure cuff as well as a blood sugar sensor may be fitted to be worn after the appointment. Participants will be asked to complete a questionnaire(s), with follow-up for up to 13 months.

The cardiometabolic health of those who conceived with or without IVF treatment and with or without a history of infertility will be compared at both time points to investigate the possibility of links between infertility, IVF processes and CVD risk and to understand any potential barriers to recruitment of individuals at either time point to guide future studies. This information could then be used in a full-scale study, including in pregnancy, to improve care and promote lifelong health for women with infertility.

Detailed Description

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Objectives:

Primary objective: To assess the feasibility of a pre-conception and postnatal cardiometabolic health research study in infertile and fertile individuals.

Secondary objectives:

* To assess clinic-measured cardiometabolic status
* To measure ambulatory cardiovascular status
* To measure ambulatory blood glucose concentrations
* To assess the views of fertile and infertile individuals on cardiometabolic health optimisation and research in this area
* To assess acceptability of cardiometabolic status measurement approaches (clinic and ambulatory measured) in fertile and infertile populations
* To conduct initial exploratory investigations into whether cardiometabolic status is influenced by a history of infertility

Study Design This is a prospective observational cohort study consisting of two cohorts: a pre-conception cohort and a post-pregnancy cohort made up of individuals with and without a history of infertility. All participants of either cohort will have one research visit.

Individuals will be invited to attend a single face-to-face research appointment where the following will be undertaken:

* • Electronic wwritten consent will be obtained by a GCP-trained member of the clinical research team and a study number allocated.
* Optional consent will be obtained for access to medical records held at MFT (pertaining to any subsequent pregnancy and cardiometabolic outcomes, if in the pre-conception cohort) and to future data linkage studies related to future cardiometabolic health outcomes.
* Demographic data, medical history including cardiovascular/metabolic/obstetric/gynaecological history, medication history as well as mental health history, diet, breastfeeding, exercise, education and smoking status will be recorded.
* Anthropometric measurements, including height, weight, lean and fat mass (bioimpedance scale) and adiposity distribution (skin fold thickness), will be measured. BMI and waist-hip ratio will be calculated.
* Non-invasive assessments of cardiovascular function will be performed, including Mobil-O-Graph (pulse wave velocity, cardiac output, blood pressure, heart rate and total vascular resistance) using a blood pressure cuff, with or without EndoPAT 2000™ (endothelial function and vascular stiffness) via finger probes before and after occlusion with a blood pressure cuff.
* Blood samples (maximum 15ml of blood, equivalent to six teaspoons) for assessment of renal function, lipid levels and glucose control via HbA1C, will be collected by an appropriately trained member of the research team, analysed and clinically reported in line with routine clinical care.
* An ambulatory blood pressure monitor/pulse wave analyser (Mobil-O-Graph) will be fitted (if consent provided and a machine is available) and participants requested to wear this for 24 hours following the appointment, while conducting their daily activities. Once the Mobil-O-Graph device is returned the data will be downloaded by a member of the clinical research team and analysed.
* A continuous glucose monitor (CGM; FreeStyle Libre Pro IQ) will be fitted (if consent provided and a machine is available) and participants requested to wear for a minimum of 24-48 hours following the appointment, while conducting their daily activities (CGM data can be collected from a single sensor for up to 14 days). CGM data will be downloaded once the device is returned.

Participants will be asked to complete a post-participation questionnaire during the visit or via an email link sent to the participant after the visit, exploring:

* Views on cardiometabolic health optimisation
* Acceptability of the cardiometabolic health assessment, timing, approach to investigation and overall acceptability of participation

Analysis:

As this is a feasibility study, analysis will be through descriptive statistics (e.g., means/medians, standard deviations/interquartile ranges for continuous variables and frequencies and percentages for categorical variables) precision estimates (i.e., width of confidence interval).

We will conduct exploratory regression analyses to inform the design of adequately powered future studies.

Potential impact:

This study will assess the feasibility of recruiting individuals, with/without an infertility history, to a study of pre-conception and postnatal cardiometabolic status assessment. It will give initial indications of whether any difference in cardiometabolic health of infertile individuals pre-dates IVF treatment and/or persists or resolves in the short-term post-delivery. It will be the first to use ambulatory measures of cardiometabolic health (such as wearable blood pressure and glucose monitors), which may have increased sensitivity to detect subtle signs of (differences in) cardiometabolic (dys)function during normal activity, compared with single time point measures during clinical visits.

Ultimately, a better understanding of cardiometabolic dysfunction in infertile individuals may enable pre- or post- conception intervention (dietary, exercise and potentially pharmacological treatment) to optimise health before, during and after pregnancy in a life course approach to women's health (with anticipated positive impacts on the health of any resulting infant(s)).

Conditions

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Maternal Cardiometabolic Health Infertility Assisted Reproductive Technology Cardiovascular Health Metabolic Health in Vitro Fertilisation

Study Design

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Observational Model Type

COHORT

Study Time Perspective

CROSS_SECTIONAL

Study Groups

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Pre-conception: history of infertility cohort

Individuals with a history of infertility who have been accepted to undergo in vitro fertiliitsation (IVF) treatment (NHS or private funding) at the Department of Reproductive Medicine, Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust.

No interventions assigned to this group

Pre- conception: no history of infertility cohort

Healthy individuals with no history of infertility, attending a pre-conception appointment at Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust.

No interventions assigned to this group

Post-pregnancy cohort

Individuals who participated in the START (St Mary's After Reproductive Technology) clinic study (20/NE/0220) who consented to receive future research invitations, will be invited to a research appointment 1-5 years post-birth.

No interventions assigned to this group

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* In pre-conception cohort:

* Aged between 16 and 45
* Able to provide informed consent
* Either: 1) Those with a history of infertility (failure to conceive after at least 1 year of unprotected intercourse/3-6 cycles of Intra-Uterine Insemination (IUI) or diagnosed cause of infertility) and accepted for IVF at The Department of Reproductive Medicine, MFT or, 2) attending for a pre-conception appointment at MFT
* Nulliparous (no previous pregnancies beyond 20 weeks)
* No pre-existing heart disease, hypertensive disease, vascular disease or diabetes
* In post-pregnancy cohort

* Aged between 16 and 45
* Able to provide informed consent
* Participant of START clinic study (achieved pregnancy via a) IVF with or without ICSI treatment, b) spontaneous conception without medical intervention within 12 months, or c) spontaneous conception following ovulation induction for delay in spontaneous conception \>12 months or confirmed anovulation)

Exclusion Criteria

\- In all participants:

* Prisoners
* Born male at birth
* Language barrier not overcome by telephone or video interpretation services
* Pregnant at time of study visit

Pre-conception participants only:

• Accepted for IVF for non-infertility reasons i.e. egg donation, egg collection, egg banking, gestational surrogacy
Minimum Eligible Age

16 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

45 Years

Eligible Sex

FEMALE

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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University of Manchester

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Lucy Higgins

Senior Clinical Lecturer and Honorary Consultant Obstetrician

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Central Contacts

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Lucy Higgins, MBChB PhD MRCOG

Role: CONTACT

+44 0161705650

Sarah Willetts, BMedSci MBChB

Role: CONTACT

Other Identifiers

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351318

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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